HomeMy WebLinkAboutGerald McCaskill, Brazos Valley Heroes
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Growing up and farming. on the Trinity River
sometimes felt like you were in the middle of an ocean
when the Trinity River flooded. That was the most
water Gerold McCaskill had ever seen until he joined
the Navy and set sail for Saipan in the Pacific.
"I graduated from Centerville High in 1942 at
the age of 16. It took a while for me to be eligible to
go into the military so I stayed and helped my Dad
farm until March 15, 1944, when Ijoined the Navy. I
did boot camp for six weeks in San Diego and was
immediately assigned to sea duty with no leave to go
home. The fast ship I saw, I got on and sailed to
Hawaii. In Hawaii. I was assigned to the USS
Tennessee, an old battleship that was almost sunk at
Pearl Harbor when the war began.
"Gn June 10, 1944, we headed to sea for the
invasion of Saipan. In less than 90 days, I had gone
from a farm boy from Centerville, Texas, to the mid-
dle of a war. My hair still hadn't grown out from boot
camp. By December 1944,1 was a veteran of five bat-
tles. I grew up in a hurry."
Three days before an invasion, the Ternessee
would go in and fire its guns at certain targets and sec-
tors of the island. After Saipan, McCaskill and the
Tennessee headed for Guam for the same type of duty.
"When we went into Guam, we were hit by a
shore battery that hit our five -inch gun placement and
killed all in the gun mount. We also received damage
to the quarterdeck. I was on damage control, and my
job was to put out the fire and to try to control the
damage."
After the Tennessee was repaired, it headed to
the Philippines for the invasion of September 1944.
"Admiral 'Bull' Halsey was in command. The
Japanese decoyed him north and he took all the new
ships with him, leaving six old battleships to protect
the Philippines. After Halsey left, here came the
Japanese, with Halsey too far away to help. Admiral
Olendorf, who was left in command of the Tennessee
and the other ships, knew the location of the Japanese
fleet from our aerial intelligence."
Olendorf decided that the battle for the
Philippines and the sea battle for control of the Pacific
would be waged at Surigao Strait with six old battle-
ships, to include the Tennessee.
"We knew where they would come from, wejust
didn't know when. The Japanese attacked at 3 a.m.
with PT boats. We were sitting broadside in a battle
line and could fire all of our guns at the Japanese,
while they could only fire their forward batteries. We
were fuing all of our 14 -inch guns and everything else
we had. So were the rest of our ships:'
When it was over, the US naval forces had sunk
two battleships, two cruisers, five destroyers and had
sent.Admiral Nishimura, the commander of the
Japanese Navy, to a watery grave. The Japanese Navy
would never be a viable force in the Pacific again.
"We were sent to Bremerton, Washington, to be
refitted and I was able to go home on leave for the
first time. We were paid in silver dollars mid I had to
travel in my dress blues which only had a small front
pocket and I had all those silver dollars in that small
pocket. I looked like I had a hernia. It was good to be
home again, especially at Christmas time"
By January 1945, McCaskill was back in the
Philippines. He soon headed for the invasion of Iwo
Jima in February 1945. From there it was on to
Okinawa.
"We were supporting our ground troops who had
landed on Okinawa when we were attacked by seven
Kamikaze planes. We shot down six, but one hit our
starboard side and rolled down the side of the ship.
The plane's bomb went off in our compartment. We
lost 26 men and over 100 other sailors were wounded.
The saddest funeral I have ever attended was the bur-
ial at sea of the 26 men we lost"
When the war ended, McCaskill was part of the
first ones from the Tennessee to go ashore on the
Japanese mainland.
"When we beached our boat, we were met by
some Japanese ladies and kids. A little girl came up to
me and gave me a small cup in a small silk bag. I still
have it today."
After the war, McCaskill returned to Texas and
emo0ed at A&M under the GI Bill.
"The first test I took was chemistry, and I made
a 19. I realized I had two choices. I could study and
learn or go home and pick cotton. I studied."
McCaskill graduated in 1950 and spent most of
his career in the banking business in Andrews, Texas,
before retiring to College Station in 1990.
The crew of the Tennessee has an annual
reunion, but there are fewer and fewer each year.
McCaskill always attends because the men in the crew
were those who had changed from boys to men -
together. And they were men you could depend on.
Gerald McCaskill's name can be found on the
Brazos Valley Veterans Memorial. If you want to
make a contribution or know of a World War It veter-
an whose story needs to be told contact the Brazos
Valley Veterans Memorial at www.veterans-memori-
al.org or Bill Youngkin at 260 -7030.